Tropical Forest Community Ecology

(Grace) #1
0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

Percent abundance

Phyllachoraceae sp. A
Botryosphaeriaceae sp. A

Xylariaceae sp. AXylariaceae sp. B"Scytalidium" sp. A

Botryosphaeriaceae sp. B

Phyllachoraceae sp. D
Amphisphaeriaceae sp. A

Xylariaceae sp. CXylariaceae sp. DValsaceae sp. A

Amphisphaeriaceae sp. B

Nectriaceae sp. A
Trichocomaceae sp. A

Valsaceae sp. BXylariaceae sp. ENectriaceae sp. B
Phyllachoraceae sp. C
Botryosphaeriaceae sp. C

Xylariaceae sp. F
Hypocreaceae sp. A

Xylariaceae sp. GXylariaceae sp. H
Phyllachoraceae sp. D
Botryosphaeriaceae sp. D

Valsaceae sp. C
Hypocreaceae sp. B
Mycosphaerellaceae sp. 1Herpotrichiellaceae sp. 1

Calosphaeriaceae sp. 1

Uncertain placement

Fungal species

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

Phyllachorales

Xylariales
DiaporthalesHypocreales
Calosphaeriales

Eurotiales
Chaetothyriales
Order incertae sedisUncertain placement
Orders

SordariomycetesDothideomycetesEurotiomycetidae
ChaetothyriomycetidaeUncertain placement
Subclasse s

(a)


(d) (e)

(b) (c)

Acarosporomycetes

Pezizomycotina/Euascomycetes

15 10 5 0
No. of species

0 102030405

0

No. of leaf segments
Observed richnessBootstrap

Fisher's

a^ = 4.71
H' = 1.33D = 2.15
LecanoromycetesOstropomycetesEurotiomycetidaeChaetothyriomycetidaeLeotiomycetes (2)LichinomycetesLeotiomycetes (1)DothideomycetesArthoniomycetesSordariomycetes

Pezizomycetes
(Saccharomycotina)

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

Figure 15.1

Taxonomic diversity and relative abundance of fungal

endophytes inhabiting healthy leaves of tropical trees at Barro

Colorado Island, Panama

(BCI). (a) Relative abundance and taxonomic placement

of the 31 most common species isolated from three mature

leaves of

Laetia thamnia

(Flacourtiaceae),

Trichilia tuberculata

(Meliaceae), and

Gustavia superba

(Lecythidaceae). Taxonomic placements are based on BLAST

matches in the NCBI GenBank database for

sequence data (ca. 600 base pairs) from the nuclear ribosomal

ITS regions, including the 5.8S gene (

N

=

127 isolates), coupled with phylogenetic analyses

(Arnold and Lutzoni 2007). Most species are rare, and

very few species are common. Panels (b) and (c) summarize

these data at the ordinal (b) and subclass (c)

levels, demonstratin gthe dominance of the Sordariomycetes

(especially Phyllachorales and Xylariales). Panel (d) shows the

current phylo genetic

hypothesis for

relationships of the Euascomycota (after Lutzoni

et al

. 2004), showin gthe phylo genetic breadth of endoph


ytic isolates from only nine leaves at BCI. Black circles

indicate lineages in which endophytes were found in the present

study, white circles indicate lineages in which endophytes are

known from other studi

es, and gray

triangles indicate lineages in which the majority of (Arthoniom

ycetes) or all known species (e.g., Lichinomycetes) are licheniz

ed, rather than free-living. With the

exception of the clade of decomposer fungi known as

Leotiomycetes (2), all major lineages that are not lichenized contain

endophytic fungi. Panel (e) indicates the

accumulation of endophyte species, defined as indicated in (a),

as a function of the number of leaf segments sampled from leav

es of

Laetia thamnia

,Trichilia

tuberculata

, and

Gustavia superba

(N

=

3 leaves/species, 15 tissue segments/leaf). Even when sing

letons are excluded from the analysis, the accumulation of

observed richness (black circles) and estimated richness

based on bootstrap analyses (triangles) continues to rise, and

diversity values (Fisher’


,

Shannon index [H

′], and Simpson’s index [D]) remain high.
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